More mysteriously, Horvath has alleged separately that a male co-worker wanted to sleep with her and she declined, at which point he began to undermine her at work. She repeated that allegation on Twitter today. It is not clear who the person is, and we do not have his side of the story.

Broadly, Horvath alleges that this man approached her at work, wanting to date her. She declined. In fact, she was dating someone else at GitHub at the time, she told TechCrunch:

While the above was going on, Horvath had what she referred to as an awkward, almost aggressive encounter with another GitHub employee, who asked himself over to “talk,” and then professed his love, and “hesitated” when he was asked to leave. Horvath was in a committed relationship at the time, something this other employee was well aware of, according to Horvath.

The rejection of the other employee led to something of an internal battle at GitHub. According to Horvath, the engineer, “hurt from my rejection, started passive-aggressively ripping out my code from projects we had worked on together without so much as a ping or a comment. I even had to have a few of his commits reverted. I would work on something, go to bed, and wake up to find my work gone without any explanation.” The employee in question, according to Horvath, is both “well-liked at GitHub” and “popular in the community.”

His “behavior towards female employees,” according to Horvath, “especially those he sees as opportunities is disgusting.”

Julie calls out an engineer in her story. The engineer she alleges harassed her was in fact an ex-boyfriend that she was still friends with at the time, not a random coworker she barely knew. They had dated prior to working at GitHub and were on good terms at the time.

The project he “ripped out” code from was a small css refactoring on an internal side project that he was helping her with. At the time of the incident, she was not upset about it and it was quickly fixed. At the time of her departure, she was not on great terms with him and her public story changed.

The Medium article also alleged that Horvath was spreading rumors about the Preston-Werners, and it was these rumors that led to the conflict between Horvath and the Preston-Werners.